Title 49 › Subtitle SUBTITLE V— - RAIL PROGRAMS › Part PART A— - SAFETY › Chapter CHAPTER 201— - GENERAL › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - GENERAL › § 20105
Allows a State safety agency to take part in federal railroad inspections and monitoring only if the agency sends a yearly written certification that it has the power to regulate railroad safety in the State, got copies of the federal safety rules that apply, and is doing the inspections and surveillance the federal official requires. The certification must include a report, in the form the federal official sets, listing the rail carriers under the agency’s control; every accident or incident in the past 12 months that caused a death, a hospitalization, or more than $750 in damage (or a higher amount set by the federal official) with a short summary of the agency’s investigation; the agency’s recordkeeping, reporting, and inspection work and how many inspections it did in the past year; and any other information the federal official asks for. The certification covers rules in effect on the certification date; new rules need a new certification. If the federal official finds the State is not doing the required work, the official can reject part of the certification or take other steps, but must give notice and a hearing first and the State must prove it is complying. If there is no certification, the federal official can make an agreement with a State to do the inspections, and can end the agreement for poor performance after notice, a hearing, and a public notice that waits at least 15 days before taking effect. On request, the federal official may pay up to 50% of the next fiscal year’s costs for staff, equipment, and activities if the State promises to pay the rest and to spend at least as much state money (not counting federal grants) as the average spent in the fiscal years that ended June 30, 1969, and June 30, 1970. The federal official may also monitor State practices and carry out other inspections as needed. Definitions: “Safety” also means security. “Secretary concerned” means the Secretary of Transportation for matters under that Secretary’s laws, and the Secretary of Homeland Security for matters under that Secretary’s laws.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
49 U.S.C. § 20105
Title 49 — Transportation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73